HR Martin County Landfill, LLC; And the Railroad Commission of Texas v. John W. Mabee; Joseph Guy Mabee; J. E.; L. E. Mabee Foundation, Inc.; Edward Frank Kelton; Betty Ann Kelton Howell; Jeffrey M. Johnston; And Sandra K. Johnston

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 31, 2024
Docket01-23-00036-CV
StatusPublished

This text of HR Martin County Landfill, LLC; And the Railroad Commission of Texas v. John W. Mabee; Joseph Guy Mabee; J. E.; L. E. Mabee Foundation, Inc.; Edward Frank Kelton; Betty Ann Kelton Howell; Jeffrey M. Johnston; And Sandra K. Johnston (HR Martin County Landfill, LLC; And the Railroad Commission of Texas v. John W. Mabee; Joseph Guy Mabee; J. E.; L. E. Mabee Foundation, Inc.; Edward Frank Kelton; Betty Ann Kelton Howell; Jeffrey M. Johnston; And Sandra K. Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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HR Martin County Landfill, LLC; And the Railroad Commission of Texas v. John W. Mabee; Joseph Guy Mabee; J. E.; L. E. Mabee Foundation, Inc.; Edward Frank Kelton; Betty Ann Kelton Howell; Jeffrey M. Johnston; And Sandra K. Johnston, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Opinion issued December 31, 2024

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-23-00036-CV ——————————— HR MARTIN COUNTY LANDFILL, LLC AND THE RAILROAD COMMISSION OF TEXAS, Appellants V. JOHN W. MABEE; JOSEPH GUY MABEE; J.E. AND L.E. MABEE FOUNDATION, INC.; EDWARD FRANK KELTON; BETTY ANN KELTON HOWELL; JEFFREY M. JOHNSTON; AND SANDRA K. JOHNSTON, Appellees

On Appeal from the 419th District Court Travis County, Texas1 Trial Court Case No. D-1-GN-21-001100

1 Per its docket equalization authority, the Supreme Court of Texas transferred this appeal to this Court. See Misc. Docket No. 22-9115 (Tex. Dec. 20, 2022); see also TEX. GOV’T CODE § 73.001 (authorizing transfer of cases). MEMORANDUM OPINION

HR Martin County Landfill, LLC applied to the Texas Railroad Commission

for a permit to build and operate a commercial facility for disposing of oil and gas

waste. The permitting statute requires that such facilities protect groundwater.

Property owners near the proposed site—John W. Mabee, Joseph Guy Mabee, J.E.

and L.E. Mabee Foundation, Inc., Edward Frank Kelton, Betty Ann Kelton Howell,

Jeffrey M. Johnston, and Sandra K. Johnson (collectively, “Protestants”)—protested

HR Martin’s permit application because the facility will sit over the Ogallala Aquifer

recharge zone and may pollute the Texas Panhandle’s primary water source.

At a contested case hearing, the parties disputed whether the permit must be

denied because the caliche layer between the waste storage pits and the groundwater

is permeable, or whether an artificial liner and other facility design measures could

protect the groundwater and satisfy the permitting criteria. The hearing examiners

recommended denial of the permit, but the Commission rejected their

recommendation and granted the permit while imposing some additional

requirements for the facility’s design.

Protestants sought judicial review of the Commission’s Final Order, arguing,

among other things, that because the Commission added requirements outside of the

contested case process, without opportunity for Protestants to challenge their

efficacy, there was no evidence the additional measures would protect groundwater.

2 The district court agreed with Protestants and reversed the Final Order, concluding

that the Commission granted the permit, “in part,” based on “information outside of

the administrative record, with no input from Commission technical staff or

opportunity for [Protestants] to respond to such information.”

Now on appeal, the Commission and HR Martin ask this Court to reinstate the

Final Order because Protestants received all the process they were due, the

Commission appropriately exercised its discretion in adding the permit

requirements, and the Final Order satisfies the substantial evidence standard. We

agree with the Commission and HR Martin and thus reverse the district court’s

judgment and reinstate the Final Order.

Background

The Texas Railroad Commission regulates the oil-and-gas industry in the

State of Texas. See TEX. NAT. RES. CODE § 85.201 (empowering the Commission to

“make and enforce rules and orders for the conservation of oil and gas and

prevention of waste of oil and gas”). Because waste from industry activity has the

potential to pollute surface and subsurface waters, the Commission is authorized to

“adopt and enforce rules and orders” and issue permits for the “discharge, storage,

handling, transportation, reclamation, or disposal of oil and gas waste.” TEX. NAT.

RES. CODE § 91.101(a)(4); 16 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 3.8. Under “Statewide Rule 8,”

the Commission may issue a permit to dispose of oil and gas waste by any method,

3 including disposal into a pit, if it determines “that the maintenance or use of such pit

will not result in the waste of oil, gas, or geothermal resources or the pollution of

surface or subsurface waters.” See 16 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 3.8(d)(6)(A).

HR Martin applied for a permit under Statewide Rule 8 to operate a

commercial facility for the disposal of nonhazardous oil and gas waste in Martin

County, Texas. The proposed facility consists of 14 lined disposal cells (or pits) for

permanently storing oilfield waste, only one of which will be active and accept waste

at any time. The facility also includes related features like waste receiving pits,

drying pads, a truck washout pad, and stormwater management ponds. According to

HR Martin, the waste received at the facility will include things like drill cuttings,

tank bottoms, solids from frac flow-back, and formation sand. Although most of the

waste will be dry, anything that is too liquid for immediate disposal will be held in

drying pits to drain or evaporate free liquids before being moved to a disposal cell

for permanent internment.

The facility site, which HR Martin owns,2 sits within the recharge zone of the

Ogallala Aquifer, where there is no naturally occurring protective barrier between

the proposed disposal cells and the groundwater.3 That is, the caliche layer above

2 Although it owns the property and applied for the permit, HR Martin plans to transfer the permit to another company called Milestone Environmental Services. 3 Described generally, an aquifer recharge zone is the geographical area where water penetrates the ground and replenishes the underground water supply.

4 the Aquifer recharge zone is permeable and contains “fractures, fissures, cracks, and

solutions cavities that allow migration of fluids from the surface to groundwater.”

HR Martin proposed a Geosynthetic Clay Liner (GCL) under each of the

disposal cells to protect the groundwater. The Commission’s Surface Waste

Management Manual explains that, in the permitting context, a liner “is a continuous

layer of materials that serves to restrict the release or migration of oilfield fluids, oil

and gas wastes, or waste constituents.” Such liners must have a permeability low

enough to contain the material in the pit site, be chemically compatible with the

material with which it comes into contact, and be capable of maintaining its integrity

over time. The liner can be composed of synthetic or natural materials.

The synthetic GCL liner proposed by HR Martin is a layer of processed clay

that can be used as a barrier system to prevent leakage. GCLs are made of two

geotextiles with a layer of engineered bentonite (a clay) between them, which, when

hydrated naturally, has a low permeability that, according to HR Martin, will stop

liquid from leaking out of the disposal pits. As proposed by HR Martin, the GCL

would sit atop a layer of densely compacted soil and, in turn, be topped by two

high-density polyethlene (HDPE) liners sandwiching a geocomposite drainage layer.

HR Martin claimed this liner system was at least as protective as a natural clay layer.

Additionally, HR Martin proposed that the facility’s drying pads be

constructed with “prepared subgrade, washed rock and an eight-inch concrete liner”;

5 that the truck wash pad be constructed with a subgrade GCL, HDPE liner, a

geotextile, and a concrete liner; and that the stormwater ponds have a prepared

subgrade, a GCL, an HDPE liner, a geonet, and another HDPE liner.

At first, the Commission’s technical permitting staff administratively denied

HR Martin’s application because of concerns that the facility site was “unsuitable

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HR Martin County Landfill, LLC; And the Railroad Commission of Texas v. John W. Mabee; Joseph Guy Mabee; J. E.; L. E. Mabee Foundation, Inc.; Edward Frank Kelton; Betty Ann Kelton Howell; Jeffrey M. Johnston; And Sandra K. Johnston, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hr-martin-county-landfill-llc-and-the-railroad-commission-of-texas-v-texapp-2024.